David E. Martin quickly emerged in 2020. He told the world he had been following bioweapon patents since the first SARS event and that he knew Moderna and Fauci (whose National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases signed a coronavirus vaccine contract with Moderna in December of 2019) patented a lab-altered “virus” and unleashed it onto the world to cause the alleged COVID pandemic. While that joint contract is surely shady, Martin has made some big claims without hard evidence to support them. Intentional or not, what he did accomplish was fuel a massive “natural origin” vs. “lab leak” debate that distracted people from what was really happening at the time.
So, who exactly is this curious figure with a passion for patents? Let’s start from the beginning.
David E. Martin was born on April 24, 1967. He went to Lancaster Mennonite—a private Christian school—in Lancaster, Pennsylvania before attending the Mennonite institution Goshen College from 1985-1989. According to his LinkedIn page, he received an interdisciplinary Bachelor of Arts in the fields of biology, psychology and sports medicine. He would go on to receive a Masters in physiology at Ball State before completing his education with a PhD in physiology and sports medicine at the University of Virginia in 1995.
As the story goes, Martin would remain at UVA and become an assistant professor in the Department of Radiology in the Health Sciences Center. Later, when featured in Goshen College’s Bulletin Alumni Magazine, Martin would be quoted as saying the following:
I lost my legs in a very serious accident. I learned a lot of skills about adapting to life’s circumstances when you go from being an athlete - a runner for the Goshen College track team - to a wheelchair. It has a way of teaching you an awful lot about life.
That’s horrible! Maybe that was why he decided to pursue sports medicine?
Well, that career path didn’t last very long. About 2 years after becoming an assistant professor, David E. Martin made a drastic career move. In 1997, he turned his attention over to his company Mosaic Technologies which he had allegedly incorporated back in 1995 or 1996 (depending on where you look). An early newspaper ad tracked down by Mark Kulacz clues us in on Martin’s relationship with Japan.
Martin has boasted about working as an advisor to the Japanese government on pulsed electromagnetic (field) therapy which he alleges to have brought “globally” (possibly his favorite word) in the 1990s. Many of his bios also mention that he was a founding member of Japan’s Institute for Interface Science and Technology (IIST). Very little can be found about IIST, but it appears to have been created solely for the First International Congress on Bio-Nanointerface (ICBN) held May 19-24, 2003 in Tokyo, Japan. An English language record of that conference appears to be in the possession of the Library of Congress held off-site at Ft. Meade (home of the NSA).
I can’t say for certain what exactly was discussed during this 5-day event, but one might assume the subject matter was similar to a report from the National Science Foundation and U.S. Department of Commerce entitled Converging Technologies for Improving Human Performance in June 2002. The document explored some of the hottest topics for the future bioeconomy: bio-nanotechnology, brain-machine interfaces and even gene therapy. In my last post, I touched on the connection between the (failed) AIDS vaccines, the (failed) anthrax vaccines and gene therapy.
Mosaic Technologies would host the Charlottesville Venture Group—also helmed by Martin—which held meetings that brought local investors and venture capitalists together. The young entrepreneur Martin and the board at CVG would help other young entrepreneurs secure funding for their projects. According to a blog post:
On Jan. 18, 1998 Martin marched into a meeting of Mosaic’s board of directors and announced, “Guys, this is what we’re going to do. Everyone’s jaws kind of went, ‘What?'” After board members straightened up and listened to Martin’s detailed proposal, they launched a new business that is now being touted as having the potential to revolutionize the world of banking. That morning, the Mosaic board created a spin-off company called M·CAM that would take Mosaic’s technology expertise and combine it with a new lending concept — one that allows banks to use intellectual property as collateral.
That intellectual property would include patents. And who would be able to buy up intellectually property in the event that businesses failed? Well…
M·CAM is developing a software program that can evaluate the worth of each different type of technology, and in doing so, assess the value of the intellectual property that goes along with it, such as patents, trademarks, copyrights and trade secrets. The program includes a pre-determined depreciation schedule for all technologies. The program, called First Dollar, will be used by banks, and opens the door for M·CAM to provide collateral to the bank for the intellectual property of a company requesting a commercial loan. If the loan goes sour — just like a car or home loan gone bad — the bank repossesses the intellectual property and must liquidate it to minimize its losses. That’s where M·CAM comes in: if a company fails, M·CAM buys the intellectual property.
So Martin built an IP database to keep tabs on things and positioned himself as a buyer. Interesting. Apparently, he fancies himself an inventor as well. According to his own website:
His first invention was a laser integrated system to target and treat inoperable tumors. His mathematics helped unravel the way the human body processes hormones and led to the detection and treatment of many diseases. His observation of human behavior led to his development of technology which deciphers the intention and motivation of communication – a technology that has impacted and saved the lives of billions.
So, he’s also a math whiz? Wow! And he saved billions of lives?!? A claim like that would mean he saved the world from a mass die-off. I guess that tracks for someone whose website quotes Buckminster Fuller—an American architect, systems theorist, writer, designer, inventor, philosopher, and futurist that the desperately multi-hyphenated Martin attempts to emulate. Ironically, the name given to one of the first discovered nanoparticles—the 60-carbon-atom buckminsterfullerene or “buckyball”—was inspired by Fuller’s work on geodesic domes. I bet Martin is jealous!
M·CAM posted the following online in 2014:
Due to changes in patent law in the early 1980’s that effectively removed the need to reduce a stated invention to demonstrated practice, American, European, and Japanese corporations started a race to patent broad technology claims in fields ranging from hydroelectric power to biochips and fuel cells. While millions of patents were filed and issued, most of these ideas were never commercialized or even proven to be achievable.
Not achievable? Probably like that laser system, right David? It now becomes a bit more clear as to why Martin took such great interest in Japan.
Mosaic Technologies would acquire fellow Charlottesville Venture Group company Phoenix Business Solutions for a cool $750,000 in March of 1999 which tells us this young company had some pretty deep pockets.
Notice the compass in the Mosaic Technologies logo above. The M·CAM logo (seen below) also has a compass which suggests Martin’s global vision. People like Omar Jordan have pointed out that his logo is also full of masonic imagery.
Martin admits he is a descendent of masons.
Take it as you will.
Later that year, Mosaic Technologies would already plan a restructuring due to rapid expansion. Their research division would allow for clinical trials to be submitted to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
They weren’t bluffing. The following month, the University of Virginia Patent Foundation signed a marketing agreement with Mosaic Technologies to find licensees for tough-to-market technologies. Although he didn’t graduate from the department, Martin would form a close relationship with the Batten Institute at the Darden Graduate School of Business Administration at UVA.
Mosaic is linked to several patents regarding nucleic acid detection—serving a similar purpose to the PCR test which became infamous during the COVID operation. These patents, of course, were filed just in time for the era of pandemic hysteria.
Heading into 2000, M·CAM would begin overshadowing it’s mother company as it appeared to be incredibly successful. In March, Martin would do a workshop at the historically mason-connected NASA Langley Research Center—clearly building closer relationships with major government organizations.
Time out.
Naturally, when someone who studies something like sports medicine quickly shifts into a different business with such great success, one must wonder who this person knows. Does his family have connections? Did he meet someone powerful at UVA? Did intelligence approach him during his time there? Let’s start with his business partners…
Among the two other founders of Mosaic Technologies was David Winer, a former respiratory therapist who has 9 years missing from his work history in the late 1970s and 1980s according to his LinkedIn page.
He reemerged as the Director of Marketing for Staodynamics of Colorado, a medical devices company that specialized in electrical muscle stimulation. After another hiatus, we can see he co-founded and worked as a managing director for the medical company Scott-Powell & Associates. After yet another long hiatus, Winer would team up with Martin to start Mosaic, CVG and eventually M·CAM. He has since gone on to produce a local radio show and start what appears to be a business consultancy (at one time incorporated in Florida) that has been deemed “inactive” since 2010. Maybe he’s working off the books these days or maybe he’s just really bad at updating his LinkedIn.
Winer also co-authored a patent for M·CAM with Martin alongside colleagues Jason O. Watson (who had stints with the FBI and UVA) and long-term M·CAM managing director David J. Pratt.
This is where it gets interesting.
The other co-founder of Mosaic was actually Martin’s older brother, Daniel. Big bro left a west coast public health advisor career at the CDC to work with David in Virginia. About a year later, Daniel dictched Mosaic, headed back west and switched careers again. He apparently did IT in the tractor sales and construction industries. After a 12-year departure from health-related jobs, Daniel would return to the CDC where he would work on Ebola in Sierra Leone. He currently works as an epidemiologist at the CDC headquarters in Atlanta. Meanwhile, his brother is ironically known as one of the most prominent “anti-vaxx” voices in America.
At first glance, the trajectories of these brothers comes across as a team effort to control all sides of the COVID operation narrative. However, I find big brother Daniel to be incredibly sincere. From his Facebook:
Spending a little more time perusing Daniel’s Facebook paints what I believe to be a picture of what this man actually believes.
To me, this is someone who is hypnotized by generational propaganda and social engineering. Quite typical, really.
There appear to be two other Martin sons—both educators—who seem to align closely with Daniel. All four brothers seem to have a love for travel, nature and have proudly been involved with Habitat for Humanity alongside President Jimmy Carter and wife Rosalynn.
A lack of recent photos with David and the rest of his family suggests they may have had a falling out.
David E. Martin would testify at the U.S House of Representatives hearing on patents. In his own words:
In January 2001, on a single trading day, one U.S. company and its investors lost over $330,000,000 as a result of misappropriated reliance on U.S. Patents. The patents that Transkaryotic Therapies Inc (TKTX) owned had significant deficiencies in uncited prior art which were overlooked in prosecution and examination. Relying on uninformed patent advice and confidence afforded by questionable patents, they challenged the validity of patents held by Amgen and lost. Our company, using our web-based patent examination system published a projected outcome of this case in November 2000 before anyone in the securities industry or in the courts would commit to the probable direction of the decision.
In 2005, Shire Pharmaceuticals Group would acquire Transkaryotic Therapies which would result in the formation of Shire Human Genetic Therapies. In the following year, Martin would be elected to the board of directors at think tank The Arlington Institute. From their website:
The Arlington Institute was founded in 1989 by John L. Petersen who previously had pursued multiple careers in the military, nonprofit sector, residential real estate development, advertising and marketing, presidential politics, national security policy, and the music industry. Petersen launched TAI to help redefine the concept of national security in much larger, comprehensive terms by introducing the rapidly evolving global trends of population growth, environmental degradation, scientific/technological explosion, and social value shifts into the traditional national defense equation that had focused on “killing people and breaking things”. From the beginning, TAI has always focused on big ideas and big issues.
Interestingly, TAI believes in climate change but foresees a cooling period in the near future. They also focus on subjects like global epidemics, biological terrorism, genetic modification, biotechnology and nanotechnology. TAI premiered Planet Lockdown—a film featuring Martin which challenged the official COVID narrative. Sally Fallon Morell (co-author of The Contagion Myth with Dr. Tom Cowan) is one of their past speakers. TAI has positioned itself as an alternative thinking not-for-profit in a sea of warmongering think tanks.
While at TAI, Martin claims to have worked on the launch of Singapore’s Risk Assessment Horizon Scanning initiative. Often performed by intelligence agencies, horizon scanning is essentially predictive modeling for a range of topics. Popular case studies include biosecurity, plant biotechnology, bioinformatics, synthetic biology, the bioeconomy, biodefense, science policy, nanotechnology, environmental sciences, industrial biotechnology and the social sciences.
UPDATE (12/22/23): I came across some radio interviews David did back in late 2011. In this first interview, he talks about work of his that drew attention from the government dating back to the late 1980s. Is that what he did in his one year off between undergrad and grad school? Click to listen.
If you think he misspoke or was simply talking about himself within the context of a fictional situation found in the novel, think again. His interview the following week was more of the same.
Can any of this be true? (END OF UPDATE)
In 2013, Martin gave a TED Talk where he told a story about how he visited Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea. At one time, one of the richest gold and copper mines looked very promising for the nation. However, in 1989, the workers felt they were being exploited and sabotaged the operation. This led to a bloody civil war between the local military and the rebels that lasted over a decade. Martin, whose business there is quite unclear to me, fancies himself some kind of hero for being able to communicate with locals.
A blog that once covered news pertaining to mining on Bougainville Island suspects Martin may have been scoping out the scene for a client such as U.S.-based sustainable energy and semiconductor manufacturing company Hydromine. He appears to have been involved in bringing awareness to the crimes of another mining company in a different part of Papua New Guinea.
In 2014, Martin appeared in the full-length documentary The Patent Wars which seeks to understand the complexities and corruption in the world of patents. Right out of the gate, the film questions how genes can be patented as things that are naturally occurring are not meant to be patented. Martin gives great insight into the creative language used by authors to get filed, but also seems to advocate for higher quality patents. At the time of filming, he was promoting a project of his called Global Innovation Commons, which was meant to be a public database of formerly patent-protected inventions from around the world. The film also features Julie Samuels of the civil liberties group Electronic Frontier Foundation who added the following:
You can grant a monopoly for the progress of science—for innovation, to make society better, to give these inventions to society so that we’re all better off. But what we’ve seen happen with the system is that people want patents to get rich.
One would hope Martin has tried to help make society better with his philanthropic efforts in places like Mongolia along with the patents that he issues. Of course, it’s important to mention he has allegedly been an advisor to numerous governments and institutions like the World Bank, so it’s hard to tell exactly where his allegiances fall.
When he appeared on the scene in 2020, he was launched to fringe stardom due to his appearance in a film entitled Plandemic: Indoctornation. The film was produced, directed and narrated by Mikki Willis, whose alleged connection to 9/11 (seen below) raises suspicion. I’m not buying it.
Martin used his patent expertise to create a list of accusations—not the least of which is that Dr. Fauci and his colleagues unleashed a gain-of-function “virus” on the world in an elaborate get-rich-quick scheme. While I do believe the patents are a clue suggesting foreknowledge, it seems to me that his overconfidence backfires on him.
In a weekly livestream with his current wife Kim—appearing almost imprisoned—David trashed the people who questioned his intentions. His behavior here directly contradicts (as he says) his gratitude for the outpouring of love from thousands of people around the world. At one point, Mrs. Martin put a viewer’s comment on the screen and Mr. Martin was none too happy.
Kim acted as if it were a mistake, but it was quite poignant considering how he steamrolled her to brag about himself. If you watch the video by clicking the image above, you will see the arrogance and self-importance of David when he’s running his own show. He makes it quite clear that he knows everything about everything because he knows people and he’s been in the room when things have happened. Who lets a guy who openly admits to fighting corruption into the room where decisions are being made?
Making it clear Dr. Martin can’t turn down an interview that he thinks will bring him more attention, he appeared on a show called The Way Forward with Alec Zeck—a supporter of the notion that no virus was ever proven to cause what was called the COVID pandemic.
At the top of the interview, he talks about how he met his current wife on an exploration to Antarctica where he was a lecturer for passengers. He quotes her as saying:
I’m clearly the alpha female on this boat. You’re clearly the alpha male. I should find you attractive, but I don’t.
*eye roll*
When pressed on the science behind his claims that a gain-of-function virus was unleashed on the population, Martin begins talking in hyperbole and admitted he is only talking from a legal perspective based on what the alleged perpetrators said in their own documents. At 45:21, when asked about his personal stance on viruses, Martin tells Zeck that there is no SARS-CoV-2 and he alludes to the “vaccines” being the sole bioweapons. This contradicts what he has inferred in countless other presentations and conversations. At 55:08, when Martin senses how hypocritical he is coming across, he tells a story about his “lived experience” which includes being abused as a child.
To me, this feels like some sort of weird emotional manipulation where Martin is attempting to use sympathy to back out of the conversation. At best, this is a prideful man unable to admit that he doesn’t know something. At worst, he is just a conscious liar and bullshit artist.
I suppose I could always pay $2,750 for one of David and Kim’s 4-day Fully Live Workshops and find out. Man, they must do a lot of living.
Want to join me? It’s only $4,800 for couples! Still too much? Maybe you’ll be interested in taking a class on their website or you could just donate your money to help save the world…or something? Don’t take my word for it. Here’s a testimonial:
"a relentless, curious mind & heart..."
“Dr. Martin. You know of him. A polymath, a relentless, curious mind and heart, a time traveler, a Yehohanan- style harbinger, a forerunner, who is speaking truth to power to a generation of vipers ... David, as you are acutely aware, is a fact and truth seeker and bringer. I think the late Charles M. Russel would consider him a rare “wisdom bringer,” whose delivery combines the intricacy of a DNA strand, the impact of a hickory 2x4, the aplomb of a Churchill, and the story-telling virtues of Virgil.”
Stanford Graham
Wow. I would have thought this was written by Martin himself had I not found the following picture of an entrepreneur named Stanford Graham.
I can’t help but find this funny because it looks like he got diarrhea midair after consuming some of his own just-add-hot-water, freeze-dried food that he sells in bags. But I digest digress.
While Martin was speaking at the heavily pro-Trump ReAwaken Tour last year, PayPal and Venmo pulled the plug on his accounts he was allegedly using for donations in anticipation of trials (listed on yet another of his websites) against the likes of Joe Biden. Yeah, sure. Will there be any transparency with these donations? We’ll see.
More recently, Martin lectured some “young leaders” from Mongolia as part of the US-Asia Institute’s IMPACT program in Washington D.C.
What was one of the topics being discussed that week? Mining.
There it is again. It seems as though Martin keeps popping up in futurist circles that embrace the 4th industrial revolution as well as places that happen to have great potential mining prospects. It makes me nervous to see all these Mongolian people discussing precious resources in spook country as the CIA is known for looting and plundering poorer nations.
Martin recently announced that he’s starting yet another new project with his Mongolian colleague Battsetseg Shagdar and an attorney.
That project is an NGO called Ambassador to the World and it has quite the global outlook.
Is David E. Martin simply an egomaniac who genuinely thinks he’s God’s gift to the world? Is he really doing all of this philanthropy with no strings attached? Or is there a more nefarious plot being carried out behind the scenes? Is it all for self-gain? Is his blindspot on “pandemic viruses” intentional or has he dug himself into a hole in which the powers that be are all too happy to amplify?
For some additional viewing, you have to watch Mark Kulacz of Housatonic Live's reaction to a recent COVID summit in Romania where David E. Martin was bumping elbows with an odd mix of people: https://www.youtube.com/live/xQtinKkOcp4?si=hHHn3NJcVAdmnY2t&t=912
From reading your article the good news is that because of so much media on individual idiots like this prick , they sooner or later trip themselves up . If you’re going to fib you better have an idetic memory. The problem is there are too many of these clowns in “ The system “